Department of Psychology.
J Exp Psychol Gen. 2021 Oct;150(10):2036-2056. doi: 10.1037/xge0000899. Epub 2021 Mar 18.
From early in development, humans show a strong preference for members of their own groups, even in so-called minimal (i.e., arbitrary and unfamiliar) groups, leading to tremendous negative consequences such as outgroup discrimination and derogation. A better understanding of the underlying processes driving humans' group mindedness is an important first step toward fighting discrimination and inequality on a bigger level. Based on the assumption that minimal group allocation elicits the anticipation of future within-group cooperation, which in turn elicits ingroup preference, we investigate whether changing participants' anticipation from within-group cooperation to between-group cooperation reduces their ingroup bias. In the present set of five studies (overall = 465) we test this claim in two different populations (children and adults), in two different countries (United States and Germany), and in two kinds of groups (minimal and social group based on gender). Results confirm that changing participants' anticipation of who they will cooperate with from ingroup to outgroup members significantly reduces their ingroup bias in minimal groups, though not for gender, a noncoalitional group. In summary, these experiments provide robust evidence for the hypothesis that children and adults encode minimal group membership as a marker for future collaboration. They show that experimentally manipulating this expectation can eliminate their minimal ingroup bias. This study sheds light on the underlying cognitive processes in intergroup behavior throughout development and opens up new avenues for research on reducing ingroup bias and discrimination. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
从早期发展开始,人类就表现出对自己群体成员的强烈偏好,即使是在所谓的最小群体(即任意和不熟悉的群体)中,这导致了极大的负面影响,如对外群体的歧视和诋毁。更好地理解驱动人类群体思维的潜在过程,是在更大程度上打击歧视和不平等的重要第一步。基于这样一种假设,即最小群体的分配引发了对未来群体内合作的预期,而这种预期又引发了内群体偏好,我们调查了改变参与者对群体内合作的预期从群体内合作到群体间合作是否会减少他们的内群体偏见。在本系列的五项研究中(总计 = 465),我们在两个不同的人群(儿童和成年人)、两个不同的国家(美国和德国)以及两种群体(基于性别最小群体和社会群体)中测试了这一说法。结果证实,将参与者对他们将与谁合作的预期从群体内成员转变为群体外成员,显著减少了他们在最小群体中的群体内偏见,但对于非联合群体的性别则没有。总之,这些实验为这样一种假设提供了有力的证据,即儿童和成年人将最小群体成员身份编码为未来合作的标志。他们表明,通过实验操纵这种预期可以消除他们最小的群体内偏见。这项研究揭示了整个发展过程中群体间行为的潜在认知过程,并为减少群体内偏见和歧视的研究开辟了新的途径。